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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Monday, May 14, 2018

Markets shrug off prospect of new Italian government

All the day’s economic and financial news, as Italy’s League and Movement Five Star move towards forming a new government * Alliance between Far-right League and anti-establishment M5S? * Programme may include lower taxes, and earlier retirement * Euro has risen, as European markets look calm * President to meet with party leaders this afternoon 10.55am BST JEAN PISANI-FERRY, SENIOR FELLOW AT THE BRUEGEL THINK TANK, SAYS ITALY’S NEXT GOVERNMENT NEEDS TO TAKE URGENT ACTION TO IMPROVE ITS ECONOMY AND BOOST PRODUCTIVITY. Pisani-Ferry points out that Italy’s financial position is precarious, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of 132% (ie, Italy owes more than its entire annual economic output). The root of Italy’s public-finance problem is that it inherited excessively high debt from the 1980s and has not recorded significant economic growth for two decades. Real (inflation-adjusted) GDP in 2017 was at the same level as in 2003, and real GDP _per capita_ was at the level of 1999. With a stagnant denominator, it is hard to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio: the legacy of the past continues to weigh excessively on the present. A thought experiment helps in understanding Italy’s problem. Had France followed the same policy as its southern neighbor since the launch of the euro in 1999 – that is, had it recorded, year after year, the same primary balances – its public debt today would be 45% of GDP, instead of 97%. The difference between the two countries is not that France has been wise and Italy profligate. Quite the contrary. The reason why France has a significantly lower debt today is that it inherited a better fiscal position and has been growing faster. "With a 132% debt-to-GDP ratio, Italy’s public finances are precarious. Should markets start questioning their sustainability, the situation would quickly spiral out of control" Opinion by @pisaniferry on @ProSyn. #Italy #ItalianElections >> https://t.co/SpqVBjfcUD pic.twitter.com/xm6NwaEgTC 10.51am BST Economist Daniel Lacalle agrees that the European Central Bank is holding down eurozone bond yields - but I don’t think he approves..... European risk after Italy sees likely populist Eurosceptic coalition: 10-year bond yields Germany 0.55% France 0.79% Spain 1.26% Portugal 1.66% Italy 1.87% Greece 3.98% Imagine where it would be without the ECB bond manipulation. Easily 2x higher.#Italy #FiveStar #ECB pic.twitter.com/ezSHtjIIwB Continue reading...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.theguardian.com